<div class="csl-bib-body">
<div class="csl-entry">Mostrou, S., Sipőcz, T., Nagl, A., Fődi, B., Darvas, F., Föttinger, K., & van Bokhoven, J. A. (2018). Catalytic oxidation of aqueous bioethanol: an efficient upgrade from batch to flow. <i>Reaction Chemistry and Engineering</i>, <i>3</i>(5), 781–789. https://doi.org/10.1039/c8re00054a</div>
</div>
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dc.identifier.issn
2058-9883
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/145753
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dc.description.abstract
The heterogeneously catalyzed oxidation of (bio)ethanol to acetic acid is an environmentally friendly alter- native to the current industrial Monsanto process. The reaction yields acetic acid from crude bioethanol under mild reaction conditions. The triphasic reaction is technically critical, due to mass and heat transfer limitations and is thus predominantly studied in batch reactor systems. However, in order to advance the industrial implementation of the catalytic route, the operation in flow at the research stage is necessary. It is an efficient, reliable, and safer system for triphasic reactions and allows us to define better performance parameters for a later up-scale of a continuous flow process. Here, we evaluated the aerobic ethanol oxi- dation in a flow reactor and compared it with a traditional batch system over a gold-titania catalyst under analogous conditions. In both reactors, the reaction mechanism was similar: there was a zero-order de- pendency in oxygen and a first-order dependency in ethanol. The different reaction orders indicate that oxygen and ethanol interact with different surface sites, possibly ethanol with gold and oxygen with the support. The study showed that the catalytic performance improves in flow by about 30% for conversion and by 10% for acetic acid selectivity. The enhancement is associated mainly with the greater resistance of gold to sintering in the flow reactor. The study underlines the necessity of switching research to flow sys- tems in order to benchmark more efficiently and identify potential catalysts for industrial implementation as well as to enhance our understanding of triphasic reactions.
en
dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
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dc.relation.ispartof
Reaction Chemistry and Engineering
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dc.subject
Catalysis
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dc.subject
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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dc.subject
Process Chemistry and Technology
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dc.subject
Chemical Engineering (miscellaneous)
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dc.subject
Chemistry (miscellaneous)
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dc.title
Catalytic oxidation of aqueous bioethanol: an efficient upgrade from batch to flow
en
dc.type
Artikel
de
dc.type
Article
en
dc.description.startpage
781
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dc.description.endpage
789
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dc.type.category
Original Research Article
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tuw.container.volume
3
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tuw.container.issue
5
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tuw.journal.peerreviewed
true
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tuw.peerreviewed
true
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wb.publication.intCoWork
International Co-publication
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tuw.researchTopic.id
E5
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tuw.researchTopic.id
E3
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tuw.researchTopic.name
Efficient Utilisation of Material Resources
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tuw.researchTopic.name
Climate Neutral, Renewable and Conventional Energy Supply Systems